Aussie startup simPRO hits out at local bank and VCs after raising $40m from US

When Brad Couper, the chief executive of Brisbane-based software-as-a-service company simPRO, was toasting a $40 million capital raising from New York venture capital firm Level Equity earlier this month, he couldn't help but shake his head at the lack of support from his local bank.

After one of the year's largest startup funding rounds, the maker of cloud-based software tools for tradies is valued at north of $100 million, but back in February the local bank it has used for 14 years had refused its application for a $2 million business expansion loan.

"We'd rather not give away equity if we don't have to, and a $2 million loan would have been enough to continue our growth," Mr Couper said.

Brad Couper, chief executive of Brisbane's simPRO, couldn't even get a loan from its bank in February, yet it has raised $40 million from a New York venture capital firm.

simPRO had been a customer of the same "big four" bank – which he declined to name – since 2002, when electrical contractor Stephen Bradshaw founded the business in his Brisbane garage.

Its estimating and scheduling platform for tradespeople turned over $20 million in 2015/16 and claims nearly 100,000 users worldwide.

Advertisement

Mr Couper said that, despite the entrepreneur-friendly rhetoric all the banks have dialled up since the government's 2015 "ideas boom", they had no framework for valuing his business or assessing its likely speed of growth.

Nervous banks

He said the bank was nervous about simPRO's intention to use the loan to expand its Boulder and London offices, and did not understand its software-as-a-service (SaaS) model.

"We even sat down with them and explained how SaaS works, that our recurring revenue could service a $2 million loan, and that in fact if I didn't increase spending for just one month we'd be below their serviceability threshold forever," Mr Couper said.

"They just said 'yeah, looks good, but no'. The only way we were going to get the $2 million was if every one of our 12 shareholders signed a personal guarantee and put their house on the line. It's not that the banks wouldn't like to back us but their systems just don't allow it."

Finding VC support

Mr Couper and three other simPRO executives paid $4000 each plus expenses to join Elevate61, but he said the investment was worth it because it taught them precisely where to look for funding.

"It's a generalisation but we found the east coast VCs understood established SaaS businesses like ours, and were prepared to pay a multiple of forward earnings for them, anywhere from three to eight times," he said.

"The west coast VCs are all coming out of technology successes and are more interested in taking a punt on the shiny new thing."

SimPRO banked a $40 million investment from New York's Level Equity earlier this month, struck at a "comfortably nine-figure valuation", Mr Couper said.

The chief executive just signed off on hiring 41 more people, which will take simPRO's total head count to 210. Thirty of those will be for product development in Brisbane, with the balance additional support staff in the Boulder and London offices.